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1.
The reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by dithionite was reinvestigated with a flow-flash technique and with varied enzyme preparations. Since cytochrome a3 may be defined as the heme in oxidase which can form a photolabile CO adduct in the reduced state, it is possible to follow the time course of cytochrome a3 reduction by monitoring the onset of photosensitivity. The onset of photosensitivity and the overall rate of heme reduction were compared for Yonetani and Hartzell-Beinert preparations of cytochrome c oxidase and for the enzyme isolated from blue marlin and hammerhead shark. For all of these preparations the faster phase of heme reduction, which is dithionite concentration-dependent, is almost completed when the fraction of photosensitive material is still small. We conclude that cytochrome a3 in the resting enzyme is consistently reduced by an intramolecular electron transfer mechanism. To determine if this is true also for the pulsed enzyme, we examined the time course of dithionite reduction of the peroxide complex of the pulsed enzyme. It has been previously shown that pulsed cytochrome c oxidase can interact with H2O2 and form a stable room temperature peroxide adduct (Bickar, D., Bonaventura, J., and Bonaventura, C. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2661-2666). Rather complex kinetics of heme reduction are observed when dithionite is added to enzyme preparations that contain H2O2. The time courses observed provide unequivocal evidence that H2O2 can, under these conditions, be used by cytochrome c oxidase as an electron acceptor. Experiments carried out in the presence of CO show that a direct dithionite reduction of cytochrome a3 in the peroxide complex of the pulsed enzyme does not occur.  相似文献   

2.
Experiments were performed to examine the cyanide-binding properties of resting and pulsed cytochrome c oxidase in both their stable and transient turnover states. Inhibition of the oxidation of ferrocytochrome c was monitored as a function of cyanide concentration. Cyanide binding to partially reduced forms produced by mixing cytochrome c oxidase with sodium dithionite was also examined. A model is presented that accounts fully for cyanide inhibition of the enzyme, the essential feature of which is the rapid, tight, binding of cyanide to transient, partially reduced, forms of the enzyme populated during turnover. Computer fitting of the experimentally obtained data to the kinetic predictions given by this model indicate that the cyanide-sensitive form of the enzyme binds the ligand with combination constants in excess of 10(6) M-1 X s-1 and with KD values of 50 nM or less. Kinetic difference spectra indicate that cyanide binds to oxidized cytochrome a33+ and that this occurs rapidly only when cytochrome a and CuA are reduced.  相似文献   

3.
Porphyrin c, the iron-free derivative of cytochrome c, is a reasonably good model for cytochrome c binding to cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP). It binds with the same stoichiometry but only one-quarter as tightly as cytochrome c. CcP (resting, FeIII) and CcP X CN can both bind up to two molecules of porphyrin c. The binding of the first porphyrin c is tight (kd = 1 X 10(-9) M, pH 6, ionic strength mu = 0, 4 degrees C) and results in quenching of the porphyrin c fluorescence. The binding is sensitive to ionic strength. The binding of the second porphyrin c is looser (Kd unknown) and does not result in quenching of the porphyrin fluorescence. The binding of porphyrin c to the cyano form and the resting forms of CcP cannot be distinguished by our methods. ES is the first acceptor of electrons from c(II) and can bind at least two molecules of porphyrin c. The binding of the first porphyrin c is extremely tight, results in substantial quenching and is insensitive to ionic strength. The binding of porphyrin c to the loose site (Kd = 2 X 10(-9) M, pH 6, 4 degrees C, mu = 0) results, unlike the resting and cyano forms, in quenching of fluorescence of the second porphyrin c. The binding of the second porphyrin c to ES is sensitive to ionic strength. The calculated distances between porphyrin c and the hemes of CcP(FeIII) and ES are approximately 2.5 nm.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogen peroxide binding to ferric cytochrome c oxidase in proteoliposomes brings about a red-shift of the enzyme Soret band and increased absorption in the visible range with two prominent peaks at approx. 570 and 607 nm. The molar absorptivity of the H2O2-induced difference spectrum is virtually pH-independent in the Soret band and at 570 nm, whereas the peak at 607 nm increases approx. 3-fold upon alkalinization in a narrow pH range 6.0-7.2, the effect being reversible. The pH profile of this transition indicates ionization of two acid-base groups with close pK values of 6.7. The lineshape of the peroxide compound difference spectrum is found to respond to pH changes inside the proteoliposomes. It is suggested that peroxide-complexed enzyme can undergo a pH-dependent transition to a form with increased extinction at 605-607 nm, possibly corresponding to the 420 nm (or 'pulsed') conformer of the ferric cytochrome oxidase formed as an early product of the enzyme oxidation. Accordingly, relaxation of the '420 nm' form to the resting state would be linked to an uptake of two protons from the M-aqueous phase. This protolytic reaction might be a partial step of the cytochrome oxidase proton pumping mechanism or it could serve to regulate interconversion between the active 'pulsed' and less active 'resting' states of the enzyme in the membrane.  相似文献   

5.
The reaction of H2O2 with reduced cytochrome c oxidase was investigated with rapid-scan/stopped-flow techniques. The results show that the oxidation rate of cytochrome a3 was dependent upon the peroxide concentration (k = 2 X 10(4) M-1 X s-1). Cytochrome a and CuA were oxidised with a maximal rate of approx. 20 s-1, indicating that the rate of internal electron transfer was much slower with H2O2 as the electron acceptor than with O2 (k greater than or equal to 700 s-1). Although other explanations are possible, this result strongly suggests that in the catalytic cycle with oxygen as a substrate the internal electron-transfer rate is enhanced by the formation of a peroxo-intermediate at the cytochrome a3-CuB site. It is shown that H2O2 took up two electrons per molecule. The reaction of H2O2 with oxidised cytochrome c oxidase was also studied. It is shown that pulsed oxidase readily reacted with H2O2 (k approximately 700 M-1 X s-1). Peroxide binding is followed by an H2O2-independent conformational change (k = 0.9 s-1). Resting oxidase partially bound H2O2 with a rate similar to that of pulsed oxidase; after H2O2 binding the resting enzyme was converted into the pulsed conformation in a peroxide-independent step (k = 0.2 s-1). Within 5 min, 55% of the resting enzyme reacted in a slower process. We conclude from the results that oxygenated cytochrome c oxidase probably is an enzyme-peroxide complex.  相似文献   

6.
A novel type of cytochrome c oxidase was purified to homogeneity from Pseudomonas aeruginosa which was grown aerobically. The purified oxidase contained two molecules of heme a, two atoms of copper, and one molecule of protoheme per molecule. One of the two heme a molecules in the oxidase reacted with carbon monoxide, so that the enzyme was of baa3-type. The oxidase molecule was composed of three subunits with molecular weights of 38,000, 57,000, and 82,000. Although the oxidase oxidized ferrocytochrome c-550 obtained from the bacterial cells grown aerobically, the oxidizing activity was not high. The "resting form" and the "pulsed form" of the oxidase were observed clearly with this enzyme, and the transition from the resting form to the pulsed form was accompanied by a distinct change of the enzymatic activity. The difference in the kinetics of the catalytic reactions between the two forms is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Mariana C. Rocha  Roger Springett 《BBA》2018,1859(8):555-566
Cytochrome oxidase is the terminal oxidase of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and pumps 4 protons per oxygen reduced to water. Spectral shifts in the α-band of heme a have been observed in multiple studies and these shifts have the potential to shed light on the proton pumping intermediates. Previously we found that heme a had two spectral components in the α-band during redox titrations in living RAW 264.7 mouse macrophage cells, the classical 605?nm form and a blue-shifted 602?nm form. To confirm these spectral changes were not an artifact due to the complex milieu of the living cell, redox titrations were performed in the isolated detergent-solubilized bovine enzyme from both the Soret- and α-band using precise multiwavelength spectroscopy. This data verified the presence of the 602?nm form in the α-band, revealed a similar shift of heme a in the Soret-band and ruled out the reversal of calcium binding as the origin of the blue shift. The 602?nm form was found to be stabilized at high pH or by binding of azide, which is known to blue shift the α-band of heme a. Azide also stabilized the 602?nm form in the living cells. It is concluded there is a form of cytochrome oxidase in which heme a undergoes a blue shift to a 602?nm form and that redox titrations can be successfully performed in living cells where the oxidase operates in its authentic environment and in the presence of a proton motive force.  相似文献   

8.
The reactivity of pulsed cytochrome c oxidase toward carbon monoxide   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
When pulsed cytochrome c oxidase is exposed to carbon monoxide in the absence of oxygen the enzyme is converted quickly to its CO-associated mixed valence state. The half-time for this reaction at 0 degree C is about 4 min. This is about 100 times faster than a similar reaction which begins with the resting form of the enzyme. The possible significance of this reaction in understanding the pulsed/resting phenomenon and the carbon monoxide oxygenase reactions of cytochrome oxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Turnover of cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The heme aa3 type cytochrome oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans incorporated into vesicles with phospholipid reacts during turnover much as the oxidase from mitochondria does. The spectrophotometric changes observed at various wavelengths are closely similar, and the rate is about one-half of that for beef heart oxidase under the same conditions. The rate of appearance of oxidized cytochrome c on initiation of the reaction is also similar and depends on the previous treatment of the oxidase as described by Antonini, E., Brunori, M., Colosimo, A., Greenwood, C. and Wilson, M. T. (1977) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, 3128-3132. In terms of their model the resting Paracoccus enzyme is converted to the pulsed form during turnover. The effect is observed with both cytochrome c and hexamine ruthenium as reductants. With the latter a 60-fold increase in rate is observed.  相似文献   

10.
The reaction between mixed-valence (MV) cytochrome c oxidase from beef heart with H2O2 was investigated using the flow-flash technique with a high concentration of H2O2 (1 M) to ensure a fast bimolecular interaction with the enzyme. Under anaerobic conditions the reaction exhibits 3 apparent phases. The first phase (tau congruent with 25 micros) results from the binding of one molecule of H2O2 to reduced heme a3 and the formation of an intermediate which is heme a3 oxoferryl (Fe4+=O2-) with reduced CuB (plus water). During the second phase (tau congruent with 90 micros), the electron transfer from CuB+ to the heme oxoferryl takes place, yielding the oxidized form of cytochrome oxidase (heme a3 Fe3+ and CuB2+, plus hydroxide). During the third phase (tau congruent with 4 ms), an additional molecule of H2O2 binds to the oxidized form of the enzyme and forms compound P, similar to the product observed upon the reaction of the mixed-valence (i.e., two-electron reduced) form of the enzyme with dioxygen. Thus, within about 30 ms the reaction of the mixed-valence form of the enzyme with H2O2 yields the same compound P as does the reaction with dioxygen, as indicated by the final absorbance at 436 nm, which is the same in both cases. This experimental approach allows the investigation of the form of cytochrome c oxidase which has the heme a3 oxoferryl intermediate but with reduced CuB. This state of the enzyme cannot be obtained from the reaction with dioxygen and is potentially useful to address questions concerning the role of the redox state in CuB in the proton pumping mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Pulsed and oxygenated forms of cytochrome c oxidase are believed to be variants of the oxidized enzyme. They were produced as a consequence of one or more reduction-oxidation cycles of the resting form and are characterized by an increase of the alpha band intensity and a red-shift of the Soret absorption band to 428 nm. The rate of decay of these species back to the resting enzyme varies appreciably and appears to depend on the nature of the reductant and/or oxidant used in their preparation. Here we report that if resting oxidase is incubated with either reduced or oxidized cytochrome c and then exposed to dioxygen, an activated form is rapidly produced which appears to be more oxidized than the starting material. This finding suggest some degree of partial reduction of the resting enzyme, but this by itself cannot explain the extent of activation. Our results further question the significance of the optical spectral "signature" of the oxygenated (Okunuki, K., and Sekuzu, I. (1954) Seitaino Kagaka 5, 265-272), pulsed (Antonini, E., Brunori, M., Colosimo, A., Greenwood, C., and Wilson, M. T. (1977) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, 3128-3132), and "420 nm" species (Kumar, C., Naqui, A., and Chance, B. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 2073-2076, 11668-11671), which are thought to be activated forms of oxidized cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
Circular dichroism spectra of bovine heart aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase have been studied with a major focus on the Soret band π → π* transitions, B(0(x,y)), in the two iron porphyrin groups of the enzyme. The spectra of the fully reduced and fully oxidized enzyme as well as of its carbon monoxide and cyanide complexes have been explored. In addition, CD spectra of the reduced and oxidized ba(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus were recorded for comparison. An attempt is made to interpret the CD spectra of cytochrome c oxidase with the aid of a classical model of dipole-dipole coupled oscillators taking advantage of the known 3D crystal structure of the enzyme. Simultaneous modeling of the CD and absorption spectra shows that in the bovine oxidase, the dipole-dipole interactions between the hemes a and a(3), although contributing significantly, cannot account either for the lineshape or the magnitude of the experimental spectra. However, adding the interactions of the hemes with 22 aromatic amino acid residues located within 12 ? from either of the two heme groups can be used to model the CD curves for the fully reduced and fully oxidized oxidase with reasonable accuracy. Interaction of the hemes with the peptide bond transition dipoles is found to be insignificant. The modeling indicates that the CD spectra of cytochrome oxidase in both the reduced and oxidized states are influenced significantly by interaction with Tyr244 in the oxygen-reducing center of the enzyme. Hence, CD spectroscopy may provide a useful tool for monitoring the redox/ionization state of this residue. The modeling confirms wide energy splitting of the orthogonal B(x) and B(y) transitions in the porphyrin ring of heme a.  相似文献   

13.
1. Stopped-flow experiments were performed in which solutions containing dithionite were mixed with air-saturated buffer. Cytochrome c oxidase present in the dithionite-containing syringe is fully oxidized within the mixing time and the oxygen-pulsed form of the oxidase is produced. 2. The reduction of this form by dithionite, by dithionite plus cytochrome c and by dithionite plus methyl viologen or benzyl viologen was followed and compared with the corresponding reduction reactions of the "resting" oxidized enzyme. Reduction by dithionite is relatively slow, but the rate of reduction is greatly increased by addition of cytochrome c or the viologens, which are even more effective than cytochrome c on a molar basis. 3. Profound differences between the transient kinetics of the reduction of the two oxidized oxidase derivatives were observed. The results are consistent with a direct reduction of cytochrome a followed by an intramolecular electron transfer to cytochrome a3 (k1obs = 7.5 s-1 for the oxygen-pulsed oxidase). 4. The spectrum of the oxygen-pulsed oxidase formed within 5 ms of the mixing closely resembles that of the "oxygenated" compound, but there were small differences between the two spectra.  相似文献   

14.
The resting as well as the 420 nm and 428 nm forms of cytochrome oxidase have been studied in kinetic experiments with an excess of enzyme over reduced cytochrome c. No difference was found in the behavior of the two activated forms. With all three forms, a fraction of cytochrome a was reoxidized with a rate which was much lower than kcat. This suggests that intramolecular transfer to the dioxygen-reducing site occurs only if both cytochrome a and CuA are reduced. An initial rapid phase in the oxidation of cytochrome a in the pulsed and oxygenated enzymes is related to the presence of a three-electron-reduced dioxygen intermediate. The increased catalytic activity of pulsed and oxygenated oxidase can be explained on the basis of a shift in the redox equilibrium between cytochrome a and CuA.  相似文献   

15.
1. The major EPR signals from native and cytochrome c-reduced beef heart cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) are characterized with respect to resonance parameters, number of components and total integrated intensity. A mistake in all earlier integrations and simulations of very anisotropic EPR signals is pointed out. 2. The so-called Cu2+ signal is found to contain at least three components, one "inactive" form and two nearly similar active forms. One of the latter forms, corresponding to about 20% of the total EPR detectable Cu, has not been observed earlier and can only be resolved in 35 GHz spectra. It is not reduced by cytochrome c and is thought to reflect some kind of inhomogeneity in the enzyme preparation. The 35 GHz spectrum of the cytochrome c reducible component shows a rhombic splitting and can be well simulated with g-values 2.18, 2.03 and 1.99. The origin of such a unique type of Cu2+ spectrum is discussed. 3. The low-spin heme signal in the oxidized enzyme (g = 3.03, 2.21, 1.45) is found to correspond closely to one heme and shows no signs of interaction with other paramagnetic centres. 4. The high-spin heme signals appearing in partly reduced oxidase are found to consist of at least three species, one axial and two rhombic types. An integration procedure is described that allows the determination of the total integral intensity of high-spin heme EPR signals only by considering the g = 6 part of the signals. In a titration with ascorbate and cytochrome c the maximum intensity of the g = 6 species corresponds to 23% of the enzyme concentration.  相似文献   

16.
The reaction between cytochrome c oxidase and ferrocytochrome c has been investigated by the stopped-flow method. It has been found that only one electron acceptor, a heme group, in the oxidase is rapidly reduced by cytochrome c. The presence of N3- does not affect the reduction of the acceptor, which supports the hypothesis that this is identical with cytochrome a. The results are consistent with the existence of a simple equilibrium between cytochrome a and cytochrome c: c-2 + a-3+ in equilibrium c-3+ + a-2+ with an equilibrium constant corresponding to an oxidation-reduction potential of cytochrome a 30 mV higher than that for cytochrome c at pH 7.4. The oxidation-reduction potential of the a-3+ /a-2+ couple, 285 mV (based on a potential of 255 mV for cytochrome c), and the optical properties of the reduced form indicate that it is identical with neither of the reduced hemes seen in potentiometric titrations. The oxidase species resulting from the rapid reduction of cytochrome a by cytochrome c is proposed to represent a metastable intermediate state which, under anaerobic conditions, eventually is transformed into a more stable state characterized by a reduced high-potential heme.  相似文献   

17.
Second derivative absorption spectroscopy has been used to assess the effects of complex formation between cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase on the conformation of the cytochrome a cofactor. When ferrocytochrome c is complexed to the cyanide-inhibited reduced or mixed valence enzyme, the conformation of ferrocytochrome a is affected. The second derivative spectrum of these enzyme forms displays two electronic transitions at 443 and 451 nm before complex formation, but only the 443-nm transition after cytochrome c is bound. This effect is not induced by poly-L-lysine, a homopolypeptide which is known to bind to the cytochrome c binding domain of cytochrome c oxidase. The effect is limited to cyanide-inhibited forms of the enzyme; no effect was observed for the fully reduced unliganded or fully reduced carbon monoxide-inhibited enzyme. The spectral signatures of these changes and the fact that they are exclusively associated with the cyanide-inhibited enzyme are both reminiscent of the effects of low pH on the conformation of cytochrome a (Ishibe, N., Lynch, S., and Copeland, R. A. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 23916-23920). These results are discussed in terms of possible mechanisms of communication between the cytochrome c binding site, cytochrome a, and the oxygen binding site within the cytochrome c oxidase molecule.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c oxidase from ox heart was inserted into artificial liposomal vesicles obtained by sonication of purified soya-bean phospholipids. The cytochrome oxidase vesicles showed a respiratory control ratio of about 2. Spectroscopic properties in the visible and Soret regions and kinetics of CO binding are similar to those of the soluble oxidase. The catalytic efficiency of the cytochrome oxidase vesicles in oxidizing cytochrome c increases as a result of the formation of the 'pulsed' form of the oxidase and of the presence in the reaction mixture of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxy-phenylhydrazone and nonactin. Analysis of the experimental results obtained under several conditions supports the conclusions that: (i) the alkalinization of the internal microenvironment in the liposomal vesicle is not by itself responsible for the decrease in catalytic activity; (ii) the electrical potential difference created during turnover by proton consumption and/or pumping through the liposome wall is an important mechanism of control in the chain of events leading to the oxidation of external cytochrome c.  相似文献   

19.
A stoichiometric amount of methylmercuric chloride substantially inhibits cytochrome c oxidase function under steady-state turnover conditions, where the enzyme is using its substrates, cytochrome c and oxygen, rapidly and continuously. Under these conditions, a reduction in activity of approximately 40% is observed. This is in accord with the results of Mann and Auer [Mann, A.J., & Auer, H.E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 454-458], who used mercuric chloride and ethylmercuric chloride. Paradoxically, we found that addition of methylmercuric chloride can increase the activity of cytochrome c oxidase during its initial substrate utilization. This rate enhancement, measured under conditions where the enzyme cycles only a few times, is maximal for the resting state of the enzyme. "Pulsed" cytochrome c oxidase (i.e., enzyme that has been recently reduced and reoxidized) is considerably activated with respect to the resting enzyme, showing faster turnover rates (Antonini, 1977; Brunori et al., 1979). No significant rate enhancement upon treatment with methylmercuric chloride is seen in initial substrate utilization if the enzyme is pulsed immediately before the assay. The apparently contradictory effects of methylmercuric chloride on the resting and pulsed states of the oxidase under low turnover conditions may be reconciled by a model in which mercurial binding greatly stabilizes the enzyme in a state resembling that of the pulsed enzyme. A decrease in conformational flexibility may be the basis of the mercurial-induced diminution in activity of the enzyme during steady-state turnover conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Cytochrome c1 forms an active complex with cytochrome c as previously reported (Chiang, Y. L., Kaminsky, L. S., and King, T. E. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 29-36). It also forms a complex with cytochrome oxidase with heme ratio of 1:1. This cytochrome c1.oxidase complex has been purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation and is stable in media of high ionic strength (greater than 0.1 M) but dissociates as the pH deviates from neutral. The purified cytochrome c1 aggregates to an oligomer, presumably a pentamer. No agent has been found to depolymerize isolated c1 without denaturation. However, in the cytochrome c1.oxidase complex, these two cytochromes apparently were depolymerized to form smaller aggregates, if not monomeric units, as judged by sedimentation behavior. Cytochrome c1 also forms a ternary complex with cytochrome c and oxidase in the heme ratio of 1:1:1. This complex can be prepared by any of the following four methods: (i) c1 + c + oxidase: (ii) c1.c complex + oxidase; (iii) c1 + c.oxidase complex: or (iv) c + c1.oxidase complex. The mode of formation of these complexes is all from pure protein-protein interactions. Cytochrome c1 is also incorporated into phospholipid vesicles and these vesicles show about 200 molecules of phospholipid/cytochrome c1 in terms of heme. The spectrophotometric, circular dichroic, sedimentation behavior and enzymic properties of these complexes have been investigated.  相似文献   

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